He also listed two surgical strikes carried out under the previous BJP-led NDA government of Atal Bihari Vajpayee. These were Nadala Enclave, across the Neelam River (January 21, 2000) and Baroh sector in Poonch (September 18, 2003), Shukla said.

The war of words between the two parties came after former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, in an interview to Hindustan Times, said multiple surgical strikes took place during UPA rule.

Attacking the Congress, Jaitley said the Manmohan Singh government did not act against terrorists after the Mumbai terror attack in 2008 even as security forces were ready to target them.

The UPA government in fact released 25 terrorists as a “goodwill gesture” and one of them was later involved in the Pathankot terror attack, he alleged.

“When the former prime minister and (a former) army chief say that earlier also surgical strikes have taken place and the finance minister says they were invisible strikes then he is raising questions not just on Vajpaee ji and Manmohan Singh ji, but is also casting aspersions on the Army and the remarks made by the army chiefs at that time,” Congress spokesperson Ragini Nayak said.

Shukla, in his remarks, said that both Manmohan Singh and Vajpayee never talked about the strikes.

The convention is not to talk about military operations, but this government has broken all traditions, he said.

Shukla also said the Congress never tried to take political advantage from military operations.